Continental Drift: China and the Global Economic Crisis
Sangaralingam Ramesh ()
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Sangaralingam Ramesh: Department of Economics, SOAS University of London, UK
No 165, Working Papers from Department of Economics, SOAS University of London, UK
Abstract:
The economic prosperity associated with the Coastal regions of China has not 'trickled' down to the Western and Central regions sufficiently enough to eliminate the disparities in income between the regions. Indeed, the disparities between China's Coastal regions and its other regions continue to deepen. In the Mao period, central planners held the mistaken belief that investment in the railways and development of heavy industry in the interior parts of China would bring prosperity. In the reform period and beyond, the focus of economic development in China has been to take advantage of China's low labour costs. In the earlier part of the reform era the focus of economic reforms centred on the development of Special Economic Zones (SEZ's). In the second phase of reform policies were centred on the High Technology Development Zones [NHTIDZ's].A characteristic feature of both SEZ's and NHTIDZ's is that they represent a concentration of infrastructure within a predefined spatial area. The current global economic crisis has presented China with a unique opportunity to deepen the economic transformation of the coastal regions by shifting the focus of economic development to its interior regions. Indeed, the government's efforts to stave off the effects of the global crisis on the Chinese economy by attempting to maintain economic growth above 8% by utilising an expansive fiscal stimulus has had the effect of initiating the transformation of the interior Chinese economy. This then represents China’s third stage of economic development since 1949. This paper will examine the factors leading to China’s third stage of economic development which has resulted from the global economic crisis-the Continental drift of the economic development of China.
Keywords: Income disparity; Infrastructure; Knowledge Creation; Global Economic Crisis; China (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O1 O18 O53 R11 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 24 pages
Date: 2010-01
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